Mental health and wellbeing in parents of excessively crying infants: prospective evaluation of a support package

Article


Powell, C., Bamber, D., Long, J., Garratt, R., Brown, J., Rudge, S., Morris, T., Bhupendra Jaicim, N., Plachcinski, R., Dyson, S., Boyle, E. and St James-Roberts, I. 2018. Mental health and wellbeing in parents of excessively crying infants: prospective evaluation of a support package. Child: Care, Health & Development. 44 (4), pp. 607-615. https://doi.org/10.1111/cch.12566
TypeArticle
TitleMental health and wellbeing in parents of excessively crying infants: prospective evaluation of a support package
AuthorsPowell, C., Bamber, D., Long, J., Garratt, R., Brown, J., Rudge, S., Morris, T., Bhupendra Jaicim, N., Plachcinski, R., Dyson, S., Boyle, E. and St James-Roberts, I.
Abstract

Background
During the first four months of age, approximately 20% of infants cry a lot without an apparent reason. Most research has targeted the crying and its causes, but there is a need for equal attention to the impact of the crying on parents and subsequent outcomes. This study reports the findings
from a prospective evaluation of a package of materials designed to support the wellbeing and mental health of parents who judge their infant to be crying excessively. The resulting ‘Surviving Crying’ package comprised a website, printed materials, and a programme of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy - based support sessions delivered to parents by a qualified practitioner. It was designed to be suitable for National Health Service (NHS) use.
Methods
Parents were referred to the study by NHS Health Visitors or Community Public Health Nurses. Fifty
seven parents of excessively crying babies received the support package and provided rating scale measures of depression, anxiety, frustration because of the crying, and other measures before receiving the support package, together with outcome measures afterwards.
Results
Significant reductions in depression and anxiety were found with the number of parents meeting clinical criteria for depression or anxiety halving between baseline and outcome. These improvements were not explained by changes in infant crying. Reductions also occurred in the
number of parents reporting the crying to be a large or severe problem (from 28 to 3 parents) or feeling very or extremely frustrated by the crying (from 31 to 1 parent). Other findings included increases in parents’ confidence, knowledge of infant crying and improvements in parents’ sleep.
Conclusions
The findings suggest that the Surviving Crying package may be effective in supporting the wellbeing and mental health of parents of excessively crying babies. Further, large-scale controlled trials of the package in NHS settings are warranted.

PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
JournalChild: Care, Health & Development
ISSN1365-2214
Publication dates
Online17 Apr 2018
Print01 Jul 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited20 Mar 2018
Accepted19 Mar 2018
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Copyright Statement

This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Powell C, Bamber D, Long J, et al. Mental health and well‐being in parents of excessively crying infants: Prospective evaluation of a support package. Child Care Health Dev. 2018;44:607–615. , which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/cch.12566. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/cch.12566
LanguageEnglish
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